Division of Transplant Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.
School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.
Transplantation. 2022 Feb 1;106(2):e141-e152. doi: 10.1097/TP.0000000000003970.
International travel for transplantation remains a global issue as countries continue to struggle in establishing self-sufficiency. In the United States, the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) requires citizenship classification at time of waitlisting to remain transparent and understand to whom our organs are allocated. This study provides an assessment of patients who travel internationally for liver transplantation and their outcomes using the current citizenship classification used by UNOS.
Adult liver UNOS data from 2003 to 2019 were used. Patients were identified as citizens, noncitizen, nonresidents (NCNR), or noncitizen residents (NC-R) according to citizenship status. Descriptive statistics compared demographics among the waitlisted patients and demographics and donor characteristics among transplant recipients. A competing risks model was used to examine waitlist outcomes. The Kaplan-Meier method and Cox proportional hazards were used for posttransplant outcomes.
There were significant demographic differences according to citizenship group among waitlisted (n = 125 652) and transplanted (n = 71 536) patients. Compared with US citizens, NCNR was associated with a 9% increase in transplant (subdistribution hazard ratio [SHR], 1.09; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.00-1.18; P = 0.04), and NC-R was associated with a 24% decrease in transplant (SHR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.72-0.79; P < 0.0001) and a 23% increase in death or removal for being too sick (SHR, 1.23; 95% CI, 1.14-1.33; P < 0.0001). US citizens had significantly inferior graft and patient survival (P < 0.001).
Though the purpose of the citizenship classification system is transparency, the results of this study highlight significant disparities in the access to and outcomes following liver transplantation according to citizenship status.
随着各国继续努力实现自给自足,国际间的器官移植仍然是一个全球性问题。在美国,器官共享联合网络(UNOS)要求在等待名单上登记时对公民身份进行分类,以保持透明度,并了解我们的器官分配给了谁。本研究使用 UNOS 当前使用的公民身份分类方法,评估了因肝脏移植而进行国际旅行的患者及其结局。
使用了 2003 年至 2019 年的成人肝脏 UNOS 数据。根据公民身份状况,患者被确定为公民、非公民、非居民(NCNR)或非公民居民(NC-R)。比较了等待名单上患者的人口统计学特征以及移植受者的人口统计学特征和供体特征。使用竞争风险模型检查等待名单的结局。使用 Kaplan-Meier 方法和 Cox 比例风险模型进行移植后结局分析。
在等待名单(n = 125652)和移植(n = 71536)患者中,根据公民身份组,存在显著的人口统计学差异。与美国公民相比,NCNR 与移植的增加 9%相关(亚分布风险比 [SHR],1.09;95%置信区间 [CI],1.00-1.18;P = 0.04),NC-R 与移植的减少 24%相关(SHR,0.76;95%CI,0.72-0.79;P < 0.0001)和因病情过重而死亡或被移除的增加 23%相关(SHR,1.23;95%CI,1.14-1.33;P < 0.0001)。美国公民的移植物和患者存活率明显较低(P < 0.001)。
尽管公民身份分类系统的目的是透明,但本研究的结果强调了根据公民身份地位,在肝脏移植的获取和结局方面存在显著差异。